The Anderson daily intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1914-1915, June 18, 1914, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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THE ANDERSON ?flELUGENGER r<.HIHI.'', Wigu? ii. indu. Hid North Mali SI nut A N OF. USO N, S. C. WILLIAM HANKS..Editor W. W. SMOAK, - - business Manager Entered According lo Act of Con gi eas UK Second Class Mail Matter ul the Postoliico ut Anderson, S. c. Member of Hie Associai eil Tress and Receiving Complete Dally Telegraphic Service. Entered as second-clmis matter Ap ril 28. 1914, at thu past office at An derson. South Carolina, limier the Act of March :$. 1879. Semi-Weekly Edition - 51.50 per Year. Daily Edition---$5.10 par annum; 12.50 for Six Months; $1.25 for Three Mouths. IN ADVANCE. A larger circulation than any other newspaper in this Congressional Dis trict. TI: LI: rn ON KS: Editorial .327 Iluulncss Office.321 Joh Printing. 693-L Local News - -- -- -- - ."12 7 Society News - -.321 The Intelligencer ls delivered by carriers in the city. If you fall to get your paper rcgulurly please notify un. Opposite your name on label of your paper ls printed date to which your paper ls paid. All checks and drafts should be drawn to The Ander son Intelligencer. Tlie Weather Washington. June 17.-Forecast: South Carolina-Partly cloudy Thurs day ard Friday, warmer rKlday in in terior. Put on your old purple bonnet. , ? ? o Not many want to be a camel, o Holler when you have had enough. -o An Elk Sundae-one that bubbles. -o Shower forecast-approaching wed dings. ,? fr- fi-o Don'f' be-*ufrald to drink the water in Anderson. o Wanted, "very much-one rainy day. Several, tjan-'be used lo advantage. W . _4?o-. Dy the time the bot season gets here we will bc thoroughly acclimated. -o Columbia ElkB wishes 'tb know tf the movies ever show n real cyclone. --o If wo must show our colors, we will bay tbnt \ve will?lim-chbri cotton this summer. ' "Blackbery 'plo''iobVs^ SWOBI''good enough to eat. Thermometer tube In Charleston hus been amended with a piece of stove pipe on top. Cotton mill mon ore peeved be cause thpjj .say that the skimpier a gown the,more;it costs. . Atlanta, .dispatch states Mint there ls in that city a- "full-blooded Mexican." What in1 tho douce ls '.hui Huerta is ready to mediate, light, reign, resign, or do anything but give up his pulque and his purse. bltration to induce the flies to want to blt rat ion to induce the les to want to sleep when the baldlicaded man does. --o Carranza will soon be ready to an nounce he bas finished tho Job for the mediators and hus saved several years. -o We have observed no very early HB lbg on the part of the rlverB. They prefer to Ile on their bedB these hot days. Yes. Bills from Columbia .there ls only one white way in Anderson. There is more than one business street here. Cat's all. From the readiness with wMch that Jury responded to Bchumai *'elnk. we are impelled to believe nat she sang her testimony. o Fishin' may be contagious but is not always catchin' and thc lyla' part ls not dangerous. Responded to hy the Orangphurg lodge. I'd Uko to live in Anderson. A !el low has so much trouble dodging cred Hors lu a one-street town. Responded to by the Greenville lodge. .... ? . -? Grape-vine dispatch from the court hbuse Bays that the names are being I purged from the dispensary petition so fast that the famous document wilt be | hat a shadow of its former self. There' are' some good, steady, reli able men offering for the positions of j county, commissioners. This is responsible position and should at tract good men. -o King George ls quite evidently bet ter managed at hobie than, was gal lant Did Edward. A pretty suffragette' on her knees before the latter's throne . would have been given a warmer re cen.'than George accorded. ooooooooooooo oo ooooooooooooo o o o BIOPSIS o o Dedicated to the Elks o o o ooooooooooooo oo ooooooooooooo ( ?!?> righted li) George lt adolph Kofster) I Tn him who in Un- love of mankind hold? I Communion with all kind? of men, in lime j ?'ou?es charily. Sell knowing, lie retrain? j From judgment. Omniscience alone can tell ll saint he sinner, sinner saint, or each m Tlie Hiing he seems. Ile who, witli purpose, mixed. I In man his elemental qualities Alone <au gauge Hie strength and weakness which Compose each heilig. (Jod. and Und alone, ? Knows deed and doer to (he uttermost. Tli?" lieut heredity has niven, the trend Environment has lent, what circumstance lias done to shape event, ile. only knows Who marks the sparrow's (all and whose design. Not hap nor cham e, thu universe hoth rules And runs. Who judges, defies himself And arrogates a knowledge without which All judgment's vain. What mercy is in God ls charily in men. The Father's love To all ls shown; He makes His sun to risc Alike upon the evil and the ?nod And sendeth rain on just and unjust both. Created In Ills Image, man ne'er falls F<j low the likeness to efface. Who thiB Denies would minimize God's fatherhood. Who would know God must first know men, for God I.eveals Himself lu men. and the divine ls strongest and most easily discerned In Him, or rich or poor, or high or low, In unbounded charity pre-eminent. Mere giving lu not charity, though great Enough to beggar bim who gives. Kind speech. Wen though with angel cadence charming ear, Not of itself ls charity. What, then ls Charity? A life, not words, must show What's charity. One word deflneth God. That word is love. And charity in men Is Cod's image shining through the walls Of flesh which bold (be breath Cod breathed lu them. Kong suffering is charity, and kind; Reenv?es not, nor boasts Itself, nor shows A puf fed-up feeling o'er Its deeds; doth not Behave Itself unseemly; seekcth not Its own and is not easily provoked; No evil Ihinketh; in Iniquity Kcjoiceth not, but in the truth alone. Imbued with charily, a life gives cheer. And warmth, and comfort, unto all who como Within Its sphere. It moves upon a plane Of unlversnl brotherhood so broad As to embrace all mauklnd. He who Uves V Cpon that plane ls not abashed at might, Or place, or pedigree. He knows with God As Father, man as brother, be's the peer Of ariV man. Th'ls feeling humbles him lt makes him brother to the drunken sot Or hun who's.stepped from honor's path aside; . . ' , He does not draw his mantle close when vice Is stalking by; the outcasts from the pale Society bas drawn are still to him His sisters needing love, and help, and cheer, He knows that now we see as through a ,71 ass Hut darkly, yet a day will come when face To face shall be our sight and we shall know As we are known. Meanwhile he ls content To show a friendly face to all the world, Withholding judgment, understanding God Alone knows why we do the things we do And measures both our weakness and our strength, Temptation's downward pull, the fight we mnko To keep the straight and narrow path, and all The pride and penitence of human hearts. So live that, when Death opens wide for thee The gutes which only He who beBt loved men Kepassed. thou go as one who'B tried to do '1 o others as he'd have them do to him, As one who's loved his fellow men and served, In serving man, thc God who fashioned him. Through life have faith, and hope and charity. The last of which ls greatest. Then in death, Trust mercy: Man's sincerest charity lu dimmest shadow of God's graciousness. Note: The paraphrasing of several verses of the thirteenth chapter of h irst Corinthians, of course, will be readily apparent to any person familiar with that grandest passage in the writings of Paul. The Author. DAYTON Wit li FIGHT j every man* mentioned in Cie impeach ment charges. Mr. Carter's Vote. Owing to the failure of a 2 to "drop" in the linotype setting the article on the election appearing in yesterday's Intelligencer, the vote of Alderman Carter of Word 6. appeared as 21 when it should have been 221. He was re elected by a big majority over hts op ponent. i We?1 Virginia Judge Has a Teddy Let ter which Mny Help. Grafton. W. Va., .lune 17.-A letter written by Theodore Roosevelt to Judge A. G. Dayton, of the United Stat es district court, was made public to day by Arthur Dayton. Judge Dayton's son. In outlining the defense that will be made against the charge of Repre sentative M. M. Neely, of West Vrgln la. that the jurist was guilt)' of "high crimes and misdemeanors." The let ter written In New York. May 29. 1?H4, Just before Colonel ^Roosevelt sailed for Ru rope, follows. "My dear Judge Dayton: "It ls a matter of tho simplest jus tice to you to say that I appointed yon wholly without solicitation, because as a congressman I had learned to re spect and admire you. At that time I had directed that an investigation of Judge Jackson'a conduct be made by the department of justice. "Whenever I disagreed w-ith .you in any given course'I could always count upon your action with really lofty dis interestedness of purpose and a de sire to follow thc dictates of your own conscience. "You bad nothing whatever to do with the Jackson case, and I was not aware that you even knew I bad tak en action. "Theodore Roosevelt." Mr. Dayton said he had filed with the house committee affidavits from Jim Crow Law Applies. Columbia. June 17.-The State House was practically deserted today, all of the officials being in attendance upon the campaign meetings. The gov ernor returned to Columbia In the. af ternoon and will leave early tomorrow for Orangeburg. The "Jim crow" law must apply on the Augusta Aiken railway under an order from the railroad commission. The' rear seats will he reserved for ne groes. Under no conditions are the negroes allowed more than half the i car. WM Good Tenais. New York, June 17.-Tennis players drew m the semi-finals of the Metro politan championship singles today at Forest Hills, Long Island. The best performance In the singles was that of R. I. Murray, the young Californian, who beat the champion, W. M. Wash burn, Harvard. In the doubles H. H. Hackett and F. B. Alexander, ex-nat ional doubles champions, were forced to Ute limit of three sets to beat Voeh ell and Beggs. Here's to our ' absent brothers, To dear ones afar and above. Their faults' wjb write upon the sands Their virtues on tablets of love, Absent-but not forgotten 4 For them we will sing the old line Should old acquaintance be forgot And the days of "Auld Lang Syne." Turn back the clock of Elkdom, lo the mys tic hour' of eleven ; And let us think of bro- Kf titers on earth and in heaven;.and while we bow in reverence to sisters,. wives and moth ers, We will drink. .jt, toast in silence--Herp>' it to Our. Abseilt Brothers." oooooooooooooooo ooo?o o oo 0006 o ?? fl?8? ' ' ' ? o FRATERNITY AND BROTHERHOOD o 0000000000000000000000000000 (Written For Tlie Intelligencer By Rev. Kirkraan G. Finley.) The Fraternal Orders! How many of us ever Btop to consider the signif icance of these words? Their historical significance, their religious signif icance, their political significance. What does fraternity mean? Brother hood-the linking together of men in families. The family is thc one funda mental human institution. We trace it back as far as the light of history sheds its radiance, but we know that beyond all other organizations all other institutions, beyond the dawn of nations or of cities or of tribes, beyond thc first forms of civilization the family exists. That was.the first form in which the obligation of one human creature to another was felt. . rJf Brotherhood was the first link in that great chain that each new age does but lengthen and strengthen-the chain that will never be completed and all humanity has been united into one great family. But- what of the religious significance of these -wurdi?? There are two great thoughts that are the foundation ou which all true religion rests the fatherhood of God and thc- brotherhood of man. Brotherhood is essentially a religious conception If the church had been quite true to the.ideals., of its founder, perhaps lhere would hae been n? place for or'need-of the Fraternal orderB. ^AIl that-Ute ordqrs do is to emphasize the application of the fun-,?." mental Christ iah* bfineiples.' and if all lived in 'accordance "with those princi ples then there would be no need for this added emphasis. But all do. not live by these principles, and so the need for the orders has arisen. There is ho reason for anyvjrjvaj?,? between the churches and the orders. Rather each reason for any rivalry between th echurches and the orders. Rather each should see in the othpr-an ally. But what of the,political significance? Thc trend of all the great politi cal movement of th'? last four hundred years has been toward Democracy. Democracy means the breaking down of the artificial barriers that divide men. The bringing of them Into closer relations of sympathy and mutual depend ence, Is not the spirit of fraternity then the ery essence of democracy? These thoughts have been suggested tty the presence In our midst of the state convention of one of our Fraternal Orders. It ls one that does not claim the antiquity of some other orders, yet there is none that emphasizes the fraternal Idea more strongly. In its teachings are emphasized the four great vertucB that are funda mental in the life of every true family and dominate the relations of the mem bers. Charity, Justice. Brotherly Love, and Fidelity. Any order that ls truu tn these Ideals m?st be a factor In the forward progress of humanity.' The man"who has truly entered into the spirit of this or any other worthy order must, be a better and more useful because more brotherly man. He cannot draw a line and say "To these the members of my order I mUBt Bhow myself a brother." Rather bc learns to apply the principles of his or der to ali his relations with his fellows. It is as a school for the teaching of the spirit of universal brotherhood that the Fraternal Orders have their re?? the spirit of universal brotherhood that the Fraternal orders hae their real significance, their true mission. WANT A BECKI VER La Salle Bunk Would Have To Fay 100 Per Cent, on Stock to Settle. (By Associated Press) Springfield. Lil... June ,17.-A peti tion asking for ?a! te?elvqr f?r Mi* Le Salle Street Trust and Savior;-' Bent, signed tonight Tiy* the State A id .or James J. Brady, will be filed to a' 1 row in Chicago. The petition is ?>r^ed on the report mdae by Bank *\.aminer Daniel V. Harkin, who had investigat ed the bank closed last.week. The report of Examiner Harkin de clares loans of 91,573,000 were, made by the bank to companies controlled by William Lorimer and C.B. Mundy, president and vice president of the closed bank. As guaranty for these loans,, pcrsonak; nofes. and securities which the Htnt<MQUtnior says are worth not moro than $30.000 are held hy the bank. . .' Wi? S ?jr The ro"port,s^Mad^ thaf $2.000.000 worth of not^B. Jmhds and other se curities In thc vaults of the bank were good. ..' mfV?i'.vK t? If the stockholder's, were assessed one hundred per'cenf:: on their stock, the report says, this assessment could collected, the available fund would total $1,300.000 capital and surplus, a $1,000,000 assessment and $2,000,000 worth of paper. This"would afford dull payment to the depositors and be vir tually a total loss-to the stockholders, according to Harkln's report. Another Election Called. Montgomery, Ala, June^rlT.'-The Btnte democratic executive committee today nullified the nomtnaffioiKof J. J. Speight for congress In Hbf third Alabama district to succeed Represen tative Clayton. The district ' commit tee of the third district declared Speight the nominee without calling a primary. W. O. Mulke.y, of Geneva, protested the nomination. Today the state committee ordered the name of both Speight and Mulkey to be placed on the ballot for a special election to be*held next week. OOOOOOOOOO O'O 0000000 o o o Mr. hoester'g Poem. o o o 0000000000000000000 The Intelligencer appreciates the op portunity to be the first publication to have the privilege of presenting the poem. "Blopsis." written by Geo. R. Koester. publisher of the Greenville Piedmont. In a note accepting our request for its use Mr. Koester. who is attending Ute State convention says: . "This poem, I think, sets forth tho ideals of true Elkdom and I have ded icated it to the Elka. If you care to do so, you may pub lish this id your Thursday edition when the boys to whom lt ls a tribute will be gathered tn Anderson.' If you do publish lt, please be certain that the copyright line ts.attached as this' will be its first publication and I inr (fend to forward your paper to the' Librarian of Congress to.perfect my copyright title to this effusion.' Colombia Maj Get lt. " Richmond, Va, June;.17.-Two hun dred delegates from Virginia, North and South Carolina and Georgia are in attendance upon, the Southern Re tail Furniture Dealers-' Association which convened-here today.for a two 1*3 It takes staying power as well as stamina, system and style to win the race today in shoe supremacy. Our $4 oxfords lead from the first ground hop to the finish. Tan and black oxfords;: Snow's, $3.50. Howard & Foster, $4 and $5! Hanan's bench made, $5.50 and $6. Summer Socks Gause lisle, in tan, black and blue, 25c pr. Silk plaited, ?in tan, black, purple, blue, gray, white and palm beach, 25c pr. * Silk, in blue, black, wine, white and tan, 50c pr. Order by ParcelB PoBt. We prepay all charges. mTbt Sterno^ m . Cutidme* ? ?sa ILL*. 1 J iv. We Have' Buggies < corning in almost every day tho latest shipment being a car of -COLUMBUS Come in and let us chow them. They are 1914 Modela. We have a nice line of Pony baggies. J. S. FOWLER S lays' session. Addresses were made oday by W. H. Maness. ot Chicago. Fohn Wood, of Roanoke, and Oliver J. 3andB, of Richmond. The convention viii end tomorrow evening with a ban ni et. Columbia, 8. C., Is expected to cet next year's convention. Asheville, ?. C.. has asked for it in 1916. Vessel.and Cargo Lost. Seward, liaskw, June 17.-Forty five nen of the cannery ship Paramita, vrecked May 13 in Lost Harbor, today ?rrlved on the steamer Dora. .The Paramita, carrying men and supplies o the plant of the Bristol Bay Pack ng Company, went on thc rocks.?n a tal? off Biorka leland near Unimnk 'ass. The vessel was worked off tko ocks, but was found to be sinking. It vas beached. In Lost Harbro. Vessel ind cargo, valued, at 190,00, are a o tal loss, but all aboard, reached ihWre safely. " 1 ' ; One Republican Defeated. St; 'Pabl; Minn..'Jun? 17.-4iovernor L O. Eberhart was the only republican ncumbent'defeated In Tuesday's; ort nary, according to incomplete returns on tght. W. K. Lee apparently defeat ed Eberbart for the gubernatorial lamination by 2.000 votes. The con fect for the democratic gubernatorial nomination Ia still undecided between Congressman Wv a Hammond and daniel Lawler. SR SR ?i Si ?fi Hi bri ifi !? ifi !? S tfi IM B. B. Blockier Pbone 691 0. M. Beard Phone 87. BLEGKLEY a HEARD j.idertalterB 117 E. milner 8L .? u\i.Ui>% >(j ..; ??'ld--; ;.. Answers all calla, day pr night rhone li......> ?^?Wji) .> i m BOILERS? TANKS, STACKS, ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY AND SUPPLIES, REPAIRS-. PIPE, GALVANIZED ROOFING LOMBARD I?ON WORKS Ga. -